Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    1/16

    Anthropocene Geopolitics: Globalisation,Empire, Environment and Critique

    Simon Dalby*Carleton University

    Abstract

    Critique is about challenging the taken for granted categories in scholarly and

    political discourse.Three aspects of contemporary politics at the biggest of scalesare subject to critique here: the assumptions underlying the War on Terror,globalisation and the notion of environment.The global War on Terror is not reallyglobal, and might well be better understood by using imperial analogies from thepast. Globalisation, once its implicit geographies are directly addressed, might bebetter understood as a matter of glurbanisation. Likewise earth system science, andits suggestion that human actions are now on such a large scale that we live in anew geological period, the Anthropocene, requires us to rethink assumptions ofour living within an external environment.Taken together these criticisms of thetaken for granted spatial categories of contemporary political life raise big questionsfor how geography is now understood and how we might teach it in the future.Such an analysis also suggests the continued importance of critique as an intellectualpractice in the academy.

    1 Critique

    Criticism is a necessary part of all intellectual activity, a part of research andof teaching. It focuses the mind on the concepts and assumptions that

    structure thinking, and hence it leads to reflection on premises and practicesof scholarship. Criticism is not easy to do well; it is not just a matter ofarguing and refusing to accept the case made by someone with which onedisagrees. Criticism involves hard thinking and a willingness to ask questionsabout ones own assumptions and thought. It is unavoidable if humanexistence is to be the subject of intellectual inquiry. More so than this,critique allows us to understand the limits of our categories and thepossibilities of thinking differently about important matters in many fields.In Michel Foucaults (1988, 154155) trenchant prose:

    A critique is not a matter of saying that things are not right as they are. It is amatter of pointing out on what kinds of assumptions, what kinds of familiar,unchallenged, unconsidered modes of thought the practices that we accept rest...We must free ourselves from the sacralization of the social as the only realityand stop regarding as superfluous something so essential in human life and in

    Blackwell Publishing 2007

    Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    2/16

    human relations as thought...Criticism is a matter of flushing out that thoughtand trying to change it: to show that things are not as self-evident as one believed,to see that what is accepted as self-evident will no longer be accepted as such.Practicing criticism is a matter of making facile gestures difficult.

    Whatever geopolitics may be surely it is not facile!? No, but as thecontemporary literature on geopolitics shows, some of the most taken forgranted and obvious parts of contemporary political thought are assumptionsabout context and environmental circumstances.When these shape thereasoning and rhetoric of scholars and policy-makers they have veryimportant effects. In John Agnews (2003, 3) summation:

    The world is actively spatialized, divided up, labeled, sorted out into a hierarchyof places of greater or lesser importance by political geographers, other academicsand political leaders.This process provides the geographical framing within whichpolitical elites and mass publics act in the world in pursuit of their own identitiesand interests.

    Putting critique and geopolitics together suggests the importance ofevaluating those frames and of understanding where is important and wheremarginal in any political leaders thinking. So too in academic discussion ofworld politics where what happens in the capital cities of the great powersare so frequently the primary focus of attention.The schemes used bypolitical organisations and international institutions are rarely the only obvious

    way of dividing up the world and using these divisions to justify policiesand practices (OTuathail 1996). But precisely because of the taken forgranted nature of geographical categories states, regions, blocs, continents,resources and environments it is important to stop and think about howthese shape political discourse.

    It is also important to recognise how persistent colonial modes of thoughtare in geopolitical reasoning and how Northern specifications of the globalcontinue to reproduce the South as inferior; subject to surveillance,development and management in Northern terms.This is reinforced by thecontemporary practices of neoliberalism where the whole planet isunderstood as an economic arena (Harvey 2006). Geopolitical reasoning ismostly about the view from the metropoles of the global polity.Taking thevoices that resist such designations seriously matters; their post-colonialclaims are an important part of contemporary critique (Slater 2004).This isespecially so in the discussions of environment where numerous colonialmodes of thought persist in the metropolitan discourses of both developmentand security (Dalby 2002).

    This article focuses on three contemporaneous changes in the humancondition to question the appropriate framing of these developments andreflect on the categories we use to make sense of them. More specifically,the argument below first looks at the geopolitical events of September 11,2001, and its aftermath, then second to the current transformation ofhumanity into an urban species, and third to the argument emerging from

    104 . Anthropocene geopolitics: globalisation, empire, environment and critique

    Blackwell Publishing 2007 Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    3/16

    earth system science that humanity is now changing natural systems onsuch a scale that we have in effect become a new geological force in thebiosphere, one that requires designating our times as a new geological era,the Anthropocene. Putting the three themes together suggests the need

    for continued critique if geopolitical categories are to adequately grapplewith the realities of the contemporary human condition.

    2 Geopolitics

    Classical geopolitics usually understands the geographical features of theearths surface to be relatively stable, the stage as it were for the politicaldramas to unfold. More narrowly, it is sometimes defined in terms of thegeographical dimensions of foreign policy making and the way in which

    foreign policy makers understand the context in which such policy is made(Kelly 2006). Much of this has been and continues to be written from thevantage point of Western intellectuals, concerned in the early days, whenthe approach of geopolitics was formulated at the end of the nineteenthcentury, with the rivalries of European states and their search for territoryand power as well as larger aspects ofWestern culture (Dodds and Atkinson2000).

    While the term geopolitics comes from Swedish writer Rudoplf Kjellen,the scholar most usually associated with it is Halford Mackinder (1904), the

    British geographer who wrote a article published in 1904 on the geographicalpivot in Central Asia, understood by him to be key to understanding thecourse of history. Some of these themes were picked up by Karl Haushoferand Nazi thinkers in the 1920s and 1930s to use in arguments aboutLebensraum or living space for the German race. Nicholas Spykman (1942,1944) extended Mackinder to argue that post-Second World War Americanpolicy should ensure that the rimlands of Eurasia remained under controlby forces friendly to the United States (Polelle 1999).

    Mackinders ideas have frequently faded from view, but they periodically

    undergo revivals of interest when the largest patterns of political power shift;the centenary of his 1904 article, which passed recently, has marked anotherrenaissance with the discipline of geography (Dodds and Sidaway 2004).Simultaneously his analysis of the importance of geographical factors ininternational politics have continued to engage those interested in thestrategic dimensions of international politics and those interested in mattersof defence and great power rivalry (Sempa 2002). Current discussions ofwar in Central Asia have also invoked classical geopolitical themes repeatedly;geostrategy is under consideration once again as interpretations ofcontemporary military events seek to put those events in a larger context(Blouet 2005).

    Places and other geographical terms are invoked in political discourse innumerous ways, not only in the formal texts of academic analysis and thepractical geopolitical reasoning of policy-makers and politicians, but also in

    Blackwell Publishing 2007 Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x

    Anthropocene geopolitics: globalisation, empire, environment and critique . 105

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    4/16

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    5/16

    growing international tourism and then the Internet linked numerous partsof the world and their peoples together.While states persist, and appearlikely to continue to do so for the foreseeable future, their functions arechanging as global financial flows and numerous decisions about many things

    are taken regardless of state boundaries (Sassen 2006).We now supposedlylive in a global era (Albrow 1997).

    In the 1990s, many states moved to at least partly disarm as the threat ofmajor superpower warfare apparently evaporated although a number of warsand armed struggles persisted, some of them hangovers from the ColdWar.The standoff on the Korean Peninsula in particular persisted despitethe reduction in support for North Korea after the demise of the SovietUnion. Nonetheless, humanitarian interventions and attempts at globalpeacemaking were initiated in what seemed to some commentators as a

    more peaceful period in which superpower rivalry was no longer fuellingarms races.To other critics, these interventions seemed like an old patternof imperial politics repeated all over again, a view sharpened by the air attackon Yugoslavia in 1999 (Chomsky 1999).

    A historical view of geopolitics suggests, more clearly than most methods,the importance of understanding that the geographical specifications ofpolitics at the very biggest scale need to be analysed very carefully.Wherethreats come from and who is responsible for them change in the minds ofpoliticians with remarkable speed; the essential building blocs of states and

    regions, friends and enemies, can be reconfigured very rapidly in a momentof crisis or geopolitical transition (Taylor 1990). Indeed in moments ofgeopolitical change dramatic rearrangements may shift alliances andunderstandings of world politics in entirely unanticipated ways.Assumingstability in geopolitical arrangements is frequently a mistake.

    4 Geopolitics and 9/11

    All this becomes clear in light of the unforgettable events of September 11

    when hijacked airliners crashed into both towers of the World Trade Centerin New York. Suddenly, America was involved in a new war, one that wassupposedly global in some way or other.Alliances shifted with amazingrapidity in the weeks that followed. Russian and America were now alliesin the new War on Terror. Pakistan, under sanction for its nuclear weaponsactivities, suddenly became firm friends with the United States to theconsiderable discomfort of many of its citizens and some of its serving militaryofficers too.Afghanistan was attacked because it was reluctant to concedeto unilateral American demands.All this was new the American mediaassured worried viewers.

    But some careful reflection, and this was in very short supply in themonths following 9/11, and in particular some simple questions about thegeography of all this, suggested that the CNN designation of the events asAmericas New War, and the Bush administrations discussions of a global

    Blackwell Publishing 2007 Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x

    Anthropocene geopolitics: globalisation, empire, environment and critique . 107

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    6/16

    War on Terror, were badly misconstruing what was going on (Dalby 2003).Put bluntly this supposedly global war was not global at all.The hijackerswere not global, nor did they have a global network of support.They weremainly Saudis, with a few Egyptian helpers involved, and while they had

    travelled to various part of the world, their network was a more limited onethan popular media representations suggested.These attackers came fromone of Americas allies not one of the states that supposedly presented athreat to American security.

    In many ways, the War on Terror was not all that new either.Againthe taken for granted assumptions of novelty were read off the simple tacticalinnovation of using airliners as guided missiles.This was novel, but thestruggle between renegades and their former imperial masters is a matterwith a long history. Bin Ladens start in the world of conflict came as a

    fighter in Afghanistan to defeat the Soviet Unions troops there in the1980s.These efforts were supported by American supplied weapons andtraining. Bin Laden subsequently turned on his former allies after theintroduction of American troops into Saudi Arabia in 1990 in response toSaddam Husseins invasion of Kuwait. Clearly discussing this in terms ofblowback, the unanticipated consequences of prior American involvementin supporting resistance fighters opposing the Soviet Union in Afghanistan,grapples with part of what is happening (Johnston 2000).

    But given American support for the House of Saud and other rulers in

    the oil-supplying states of the Persian Gulf, the geography of this suggestsan imperial arrangement whereby local rulers are supported by distant militaryforces.This is not new either in this region or other parts of the world; itis a geopolitical pattern that emphasises a long history of connections andresponsibilities rather than the emergence of something new in September2001 (Klare 2004). Renegades who taunt the rulers of empires from remoteperipheries are a persistent problem of imperial politics; Bin Laden is littledifferent. But none of this suggests that contemporary events justify theinvocation of the language and strategy of a global War on Terror.

    Nonetheless, that is exactly how it was portrayed by the Bush administrationin the years after 2001, all the while denying that America is an empire,because it apparently does not conquer territory (Dalby 2006).

    But if one does not accept the global War on Terror as global, andrecognises that many American actions are imperial in nature, even ifpermanent conquest is not one of them, then the world looks very differentfrom the conventional assumptions of an international system of equal nationstates and 9/11 as something altogether new.American military invasionsand policies of political pressure, financial control and direct interventionin the running of many supposedly sovereign states make much more senseif politics is understood in imperial terms (Dalby 2005). Many states aremuch less in control of their destinies than the conventional assumptions ofterritorial integrity and precisely defined borders suggest; sovereignty is amuch more complicated matter (Agnew 2005).

    108 . Anthropocene geopolitics: globalisation, empire, environment and critique

    Blackwell Publishing 2007 Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    7/16

    A historical sensitivity to the history of invasions of many parts of theworld by Western forces, and to the rhetoric of civilisational superiority thatis invoked to justify killing people at great distances from the homeland,also makes the continuities with imperial thinking clear (Gregory 2004). In

    many ways, the geopolitical categories have been shuffled once again tobring nineteenth-century matters of civilisational dominance back to theforefront of thinking about world order where American politicians reservethe right to intervene in any rogue states they judge to be a threat toAmerican interests, and do so by justifying these actions as necessary toprotect civilisation. It also makes clear that the practices of such rulefrequently produce very violent geographies (Gregory and Pred 2006).

    5 Glurbanisation

    These criticisms of the conventional assumptions of post-9/11 geopoliticsand the suggestion that it is important to understand the imperial dimensionsof contemporary politics, also raise other questions about contemporarygeographies and how we might understand the rapidly changing humancondition.These matters are at the heart of the geographical discipline withits core mandate to study the earth as the home of humanity.They link thespatial dimensions of politics to the matters of the administration and theconsumption of resources in making contemporary modes of life. Much of

    this too is related to imperial rule, and crucial to a geopolitics that understandsthe world as an external entity to be manipulated and controlled, turnedinto resources and commodities for the purposes of the rich and powerful(le Billon 2004).

    More specifically, we need to understand the maps and many of theboundaries used for administrative purposes by contemporary states as anartefact and legacy of European empires (Sparke 2005). Financial networksnow link cities together suggesting a geography of a single urban system inwhich there are a pattern of nodes of business activity much of which is less

    concerned with particular states than with the finer points of corporateoperations (Sassen 2006). Globalisation is all about economic phenomenacrossing boundaries, a process that challenges the mental maps ofpolicy-makers and citizens alike as it enmeshes us all in commodity chainsthat span the globe (Cameron and Palan 2004). Many of the geographicalentities on the world map today, which appear as permanent arrangementsare very recent.Territorial structures of many states continue to evolve.Even as citizenship is now codified in passport regimes, in Europe nationalboundaries are dissolving as a passport from one state is recognised by allEuropean states. Dual citizenships are now frequent too, further complicatingany attempt to tie people neatly to territory. European states and notablyCanada have responded with official policies of multiculturalism. But mostof this is viewed within an interpretative grid focused on states, citizenshipsand borders.

    Blackwell Publishing 2007 Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x

    Anthropocene geopolitics: globalisation, empire, environment and critique . 109

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    8/16

    If one ignores this framing of globalisation and looks instead at wherepeople are coming from and going to in geographical terms now, in contrastto the European colonising migrations of the nineteenth century, newmigrants are becoming big city dwellers, rather than farmers, miners and

    foresters opening up new rural areas to exploitation.They are movingtowards the metropoles of the global economy not into the rural hinterlands

    of new colonies.This too suggests an important change in migration patterns,a matter not helpfully understood as a matter of globalisation.What isimportant to recognise too is that rural to urban migration is a longstandingpattern, part of the process of modernisation of the rural areas and the spreadof commercial, and more recently industrial, farming that displaces traditionalpractices.While most of this may happen within states the growing mattersof migration, legal and illegal, might best be understood as a matter of

    urbanisation on the global scale, not something that is necessarily easy tosee based on statistics that measure state border crossings.The discussion of globalisation frequently misses the crucial point that in

    the last half century we have become an urban species.Whatever the finer pointsof statistical measures, the general tendency is clear, and millions now livein the enormous slums of the cities in the global South (Davis 2006). Forthe first time in history humanity is now an urban species; the conditionsof our lives are increasingly artificial and interconnected as a result of thisfundamental change in our condition. But how we think about governance

    and rulership in these new conditions has not yet overcome the imperial legacyof territorial administration based on property, territory and citizenshipdefined in terms of supposedly exclusive spaces (Sparke 2005). Urbanisation,with its indirect but powerful impacts on rural areas far from the metropolitancentres, is the dominant artificial force in the global biosphere. It is in need ofappropriate rules and structures of governance, but we have yet to think seriouslyabout how to devise such arrangements. Once again the geographical categoriesthrough which we think these matters need to be the object of critique.

    Viewed in these terms then the traditional theme of European geopolitical

    thinking concerning the control of remote peripheries to ensure the supplyof essential commodities for metropolitan consumption comes more clearlyinto view (Hoogvelt 2006).As we become an urban species, and as ruralpeople become more enmeshed in the commodity circuits of the globaleconomy, questions of violence and rule in the periphery are key to imperialpower. Much of the discussion of violence and resource wars then comesto be seen in a different geographical way.The resource wars in Africa inparticular are about controlling the local revenue streams from the exportof valuable resources, diamonds, minerals, timber and oil (le Billon 2005).This only makes sense when understood as part of a global economy whererural areas are both a source of materials for consumption in the metropolesand, now, also increasingly a matter of tourist destinations where environ-ments are turned into resorts, theme parks and ecotourist conservation areas,game parks, hunting concessions and forestry hiking areas.

    110 . Anthropocene geopolitics: globalisation, empire, environment and critique

    Blackwell Publishing 2007 Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    9/16

    Put in these geopolitical terms then the post-9/11 world, which linkspacification of the rogue states in the Bush administrations terms, makesbetter sense than talking about sovereignty and territorial states as thecontainers of political life. Placed in the largest terms Bin Ladens fugitive

    existence in the more remote parts of the global economy also makes sense;so too does the logic of the Bush administration in trying to dominate thePersian Gulf region militarily.As commentators from right and left havebegun to suggest forcefully, the Americans are involved in a war for controlof the petroleum resources of the region, a war that Andrew Bacevich (2005)suggests might well be understood as the fourth world war, following thetwo world wars of the first part of the twentieth century with the Cold Warunderstood as the third. Ensuring local rulers are cooperative is again animperial pattern of longstanding and it explains the continuing American

    support for the house of Saud that so infuriates Osama Bin Laden.

    6 Anthropocene geographies

    But all this importance placed on petroleum leads to the heart of theecological predicament of our times, one in which our artificial ecologiesof urbanity are now changing the biosphere itself in significant ways.Theviolence in the Gulf region is related directly to these things because itis the petroleum from the region that both fuels the contemporary

    transformation of the human condition and threatens, when it is turned intoair in furnaces and internal combustion engines, to alter the basic compositionof the planetary atmosphere which will change in one way or another theconditions of human life.There are numerous other uses of petroleumproducts, and the huge use of carbon fuels in concrete production, electricitygeneration and space heating is important, but the infrastructure of highways,roads as well as automobile production, was the key element in state andeconomic development through the twentieth century, hence the focuson car culture remains appropriate (Paterson 2007). But once again the

    geopolitical language, the spatialisations used to organise our understandingsof the world, to facilitate the promotion of our identities and interests inthe world, are out of line with the new contexts of our lives.

    Not least because as geographers have been pointing out for quite sometime the old geographical assumptions of an environment outside or separatefrom human existence is no longer a tenable assumption for thinking aboutmatters of nature (Castree and Braun 2001).On all scales the human presencein nature changes it as it changes humans; if environment is no longerunderstood as out there, somewhere separate from humanity then ourplace in nature too is a matter for critique. New anthropic forcingmechanisms are now driving the processes of the biosphere in novel andas yet unanticipated ways (Steffan etal. 2004).We are literally changing theair, and many of the other physical processes of the biosphere on such ascale that earth system scientists have started suggesting that we now live in

    Blackwell Publishing 2007 Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x

    Anthropocene geopolitics: globalisation, empire, environment and critique . 111

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    10/16

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    11/16

    can manipulate, and which our urban designs can effectively ignore becauseof the power of this technology. Security threats to modernity, long thepreoccupation of the discipline of international relations, have usuallyassumed that threats are external to states, a matter of manipulation of external

    environments. But in the case of environment it is clear that suchformulations are seriously misleading because it is the consequences ofindustrial production, and the appropriation of resources and displacementof populations as a result of these appropriations, which are causing theenvironmental changes that are supposedly a threat in the first place (Dalby2002).As the evidence for human-induced climate change mounts, andsome of the initial projections in the 1980s are confirmed as the years goby, we have effectively taken on the role of determining what the worldsclimate will be in the future (Hansen etal. 2006).

    How then might we think differently about the global ordering of politicsin the Anthropocene? Given the focus of my critique here we might wantto rethink humanitys place, and our role in the biosphere in altogetherdifferent terms. Indeed might we argue in light of the discussions of climatechange that most of us, social scientists, and certainly many geographers areguilty of a form of terrestrocentrism a focus on the land rather than anunderstanding of ourselves as part of a biosphere dominated by oceans andatmosphere. Given the obvious importance of these themes, and the essentialrole of the ozone layer in making life on the planetary surface possible, a

    matter that is clear both in the blueness of the sky and the blue colour ofthe globe in the famous Apollo photograph of the whole earth (Cosgrove1994), might we not now need a new form of blue theory to explainhuman life on earth?

    It is easy to have fun inventing such terms, but my purpose in talking ofterrestrocentrism and blue theory is to extend the task of critique by usingnew vocabulary to challenge the taken for granted categories within whichboth ecological and geopolitical matters enter political dialogue. If we takethe science of earth systems seriously then the implications for governance

    and politics are profound. Linking this up with the themes of glurbanisationand empire and thinking about climate change mitigation policies in termsof carbon emissions trading, suggests that at least some old imperial patternsof mind, those of exporting products, people and convicts to colonies, arestill very much in operation. Now poor states of the South are places toestablish cheap quick growing forestry plantations to absorb Northern carbondioxide emissions, often with unforeseen and unpublicised problems for thelocal communities who find themselves the supposed beneficiaries of thelatest form of development (Development Dialogue 2006).All the whileNorthern industries and consumers are let off the hook; the peripheries ofthe world economy are doing the task that we have assigned them;cleaning up our mess! Nonetheless, the very fact that carbon emissions arebeginning to be taken seriously suggests a useful innovation in governanceand the beginnings of an understanding that we live in a biosphere that we

    Blackwell Publishing 2007 Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x

    Anthropocene geopolitics: globalisation, empire, environment and critique . 113

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    12/16

    are changing. But further critique of the geopolitical categories that structurethe debate on emissions trading is obviously needed.

    7 Geopolitical alternatives

    Support for the contention about the need to take science seriously in thereformulation of geopolitics can also be found in contemporary discussionsof social theory, and in particular in one prominent student of the socialnature of science, Bruno Latour (2004, 18), has formulated matters in anespecially interesting manner where he discusses politics as the progressivecomposition of the common world. Moving on from his earlier discussionsof hybrids and the ontological impossibility of the distinction between natureand culture that shapes so much modern thinking (Latour 1993), he poses

    a series of meditations on the necessity for rethinking democracy once thatdistinction is rendered untenable.This runs neatly parallel to the implicationsof thinking geopolitics in light of the changed perspectives in earth systemsciences epitomised by the formulation of the Anthropocene.All of whichrequires a shift of focus away from geographies of administration in termsof blocks of space and a recognition of how economic and ecologicalphenomenon are about connections, links and consequences that flow acrossthese boundaries.

    Putting a focus on connections and flows of materials, wealth and people

    instead of the administrative conveniences of states and their boundaries,suggests that politics be rethought rather drastically in so far as distance isno longer used as an excuse for inaction (Hughes and Reimer 2004).Thereare consequences of metropolitan consumption in the biosphere both ingeneral in terms of carbon dioxide and climate change and more specificallyin terms of the disruptions, and violence of a shadow globalisation causedby the extraction of resources and their processing and transport (Jung 2003).In terms of politics and governance, the whole planet is being remade byour contemporary urban industrial systems; geopolitical thinking needs to

    catch up with these insights from earth system science.This is not to suggest that there are no important innovations in

    governance and international politics in the last few decades to respond tosome of these matters (Clapp and Dauvergne 2005).The Montreal Protocolon stratospheric ozone depletion and limitations on the export of toxicwastes and other agreements have begun to tackle some aspects of the globalenvironmental situation, but the fundamental switch to understandingourselves as actively creating the global climate has yet to be made.Theliberal assumptions that markets will decide, or at least are the most effectiveway of dealing with, environmental difficulties still refuses to focus on whatwe make, and how we produce the things that are changing the biosphere.Focusing only on cleaning up the mess or limiting the pollution suggeststhat much critique remains to be done! Thinking about politics as theprogressive composition of the common world suggests looking forward

    114 . Anthropocene geopolitics: globalisation, empire, environment and critique

    Blackwell Publishing 2007 Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    13/16

    and understanding that decisions taken today effect changes in the future,but changes in both nature and humanity together.

    Such a focus understands technology, and our collective choices of whichtechnologies we choose to research, develop and use, as of direct importance

    for shaping not only our lives but the larger context in which these lives arelived, the contents and processes of the biosphere itself. In the title of oneimportant volume is on the subject Materials Matter (Geiser 2001).Nowhere is this clearer than in the debate about energy use and the choiceof technologies and fuels. In the long term, how the planets peoples copesimultaneously with both diminished supplies of fossil fuels and the probabledisruptions of climate change is crucial.Will elites fight to control thesediminishing supplies or will they actively move to introduce solar, windpower and perhaps hydrogen fuel schemes making sure that social

    programmes provide energy needs for the poor and vulnerable?The tendencyin Washington in the last few years clearly suggests a policy emphasising theformer not the latter, but this is not necessarily a policy that will bepermanent if matters continue on their violent course in the Gulf region(Bacevich 2005; Klare 2004).

    Will in future, therefore, the Persian Gulf be understood in the geopoliticallanguage or Washington, Paris, London, Delhi and Beijing as a region thathas to be fought over to control the oil supplies, or will the future involvemore cooperative ventures to reduce fossil fuel consumption and cooperate

    in a more reasonable division of the earths resources? Some European stateshave made moves towards the latter mode of thinking by following up oninitiatives from Agenda 21 and other international agreements (Dodds andPippard 2005). Beijing has recently initiated hasty development of renewableenergy sources too; but a larger understanding of a shared fate and the benefitsof cooperation have yet to appear in discussions of such things as the futureof Iran or how to deal seriously with climate change. Such cooperativeendeavours might well lead to a much more peaceful world where tradingrather than fighting are understood as the appropriate way of dealing with

    disruptions, and where the use of military force to ensure the supplies ofresources from remote peripheries to metropolitan consumers is finallyabandoned as an historic imperial relic of earlier geopolitical ages.

    8 Critical geopolitics

    For this to happen both the geopolitical categories and scientificunderstandings that underpinned twentieth-century geopolitical reasoningwill need continued critique.This is an essential task for the discipline ofgeography and especially for studies of geopolitics if the bloody legacy ofthe past is to be confronted with appropriate conceptual tools in theAnthropocene.A critical geopolitics now works to challenge obvious spatialframings of threats there in the wild zones, and endangered virtue herein the metropolitan centres of the global economy.This critique will be allBlackwell Publishing 2007 Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x

    Anthropocene geopolitics: globalisation, empire, environment and critique . 115

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    14/16

    the more effective for being carried out far from the metropolitan centreswhere geopolitical knowledge is usually produced. Nonetheless, tackling itwithin those centres is essential if the imperial premises of contemporaryglobal thinking are to be critiqued at source.

    In an interconnected world, it is obvious that attempts at nationalindependence will continue as a defensive measure in many places for manyreasons. But complete autonomy is impossible and glurbanisation continuesto move national populations into large cities far from traditional homelandsin ways that suggest the importance of all sorts of political initiatives anddialogues that do not simply take the cartographies of national power asthe only geopolitical specification that matters. Contemporary politicalassemblages to borrow Saskia Sassens (2006) term, simply do not work inthe neat territorial boxes of classical international relations theory; the use

    of the term empire makes this much clearer.Again a basic assumption inpolitical reasoning is challenged here. Empire requires a focus on theconnections between places and the links between metropolitan actionsand violence on the frontiers of the global economy, just as it forces areconsideration of the identities of the subjects at its centre who are literallydriving global change (Paterson and Dalby 2006).

    Geopolitics has a long and bloody history of providing arguments for warand justifying the vilification of foreigners, but the perspectives of earthsystem science now offer powerful additional tools for understanding the

    interconnections between the fates of people in different but connectedsocial and ecological conditions. Environment cannot any longer beunderstood as a separate external entity; thus the divisions between humanand physical geography are once again also in question. But clearly we mustthink about integration of the discipline without the imperial ethnocentricspatial framings of the past, and its related assumption that the view fromthe metropoles is either superior, or the basis whereby we in the metropolescan administer them in the periphery.This is especially clear given thatthe biophysical forcing mechanisms in the Anthropocene era are shaped

    much more by the modes of consumption in industrial economies than theyare by the actions of peripheral peoples.

    9 Biography

    Simon Dalby is a Professor at Carleton University. He was educated atTrinity College, Dublin, the University ofVictoria and holds a PhD fromSimon Fraser University.

    He has written widely on issues of Geopolitics, Security and Environment.

    He is author of Creating The Second Cold War (London, Pinter and NewYork: Guilford 1990) and Environmental Security (Minneapolis: Universityof Minnesota Press 2002) and co-editor ofThe Geopolitics Reader2nd edition,(London and New York: Routledge, 2006). He has written for journalssuch as Studies in Political Economy, Geopolitics and The Canadian Geographer.Simon is the political geography section editor forGeography Compass.

    116 . Anthropocene geopolitics: globalisation, empire, environment and critique

    Blackwell Publishing 2007 Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    15/16

    Note

    * Correspondence Address: Simon Dalby, Department of Geography and Environmental Studies,Carleton University, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, Ontario, K1S 5B6, Canada. E-mail:[email protected].

    References

    Agnew,J. (2003). Geopolitics: revisioning world politics. London: Routledge.. (2005). Sovereignty regimes: terr itoriality and state authority in contemporary world politics.

    Annals of the Association of American Geographers 95 (2), pp.437461.Albrow, M. (1997). The global age: state and society beyond modernity. Stanford, CA: Stanford

    University Press.Bacevich, A. (2005). The new american militarism: how americans are seduced by war. New York:

    Oxford University Press.Blouet, B. (ed.) (2005). Global geostrategy: mackinder and the defence of the West. London: Frank Cass.

    Cameron,A., and Palan R. (2004). The imagined economies of globalization. London: Sage.Castree, B., and Braun B. (eds.) (2001). Social nature: theory, practice, and politics. Oxford, UK:

    Blackwell.Chomsky, N. (1999). The new military humanism: lessons from Kosovo. Monroe, ME: Courage Press.Clapp,J., and Dauvergne P. (2005). Paths to a green world: the political economy of the global environment.

    Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Cosgrove, D. (1994). Contested global visions: one-world, whole-earth, and the Apollo space

    photographs.Annals of the Association of American Geographers 84 (2), pp.270294.Crutzen, P. J. (2002). Geology of Mankind. Nature415, p.23.Dalby, S. (2002). Environmental security. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.. (2003). Calling 911: geopolitics, security and Americas new war.Geopolitics 8 (3),pp.6186.. (2005). Political space: autonomy, liberalism and empire. Alternatives: Global, Local, Political30 (4), pp.415441.. (2006). Geopolitics, grand strategy and the Bush doctrine. In: David, C. P. and Grondin,

    D. (eds.) Hegemony or Empire?The Redefinition of American Power under George W. Bush. Aldershot,UK: Ashgate. pp.3349.

    Davis, M. (2006). Planet of slums. London:Verso.Development Dialogue (2006). Special edition on Carbon Trading, No. 46, September.Dittmer,J. (2005).Captain Americas empire: reflections on identity, popular culture, and post-9/11

    geopolitics.Annals of the Association of American Geographers 95 (3), pp.626643.Dodds, K., and Atkinson D. (eds.) (2000). Geopolitical traditions: critical histories of a century of geopolitical

    thought. London: Routledge.

    Dodds, K., and Sidaway J. (eds.) (2004). Halford J. Mackinder and the geographical pivot ofhistory: a centennial retrospective. Geographical Journal170 (4), pp.291384.Dodds, F., and Pippard T. (eds.) (2005). Human and environmental security: an agenda for change.

    London: Earthscan.Flannery,T. (2006). The weather makers: how we are changing the climate and what it means for life on

    Earth. Toronto, Canada: Harper Collins.Foucault, M. (1988). Practicing criticism in Michel Foucault, politics,philosophy, culture: interviews and

    other writings 19771984. New York: Routledge.Geiser, K. (2001). Materials matter: towards a sustainable materials policy. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Gregory, D. (2004). The colonial present:Afghanistan, Palestine, Iraq. Oxford, UK: Blackwell.Gregory, D., and Pred A. (eds.) (2006). Violent geographies: fear terror and political violence. London:

    Routledge.Hansen, J. et al. (2006). Global temperature change. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences103 (30), pp.1428814293.

    Harvey, D. (2006). Neoliberalism as creative destruction. Geografiska Annaler B88 (2),pp.145158.Hoogveldt,A. (2006).Globalization and post-modern imperialism.Globalizations 3 (2),pp.159174.Hughes,A., and Reimer, S. (eds.) (2004). Geographies of commodity chains. London: Routledge.

    Blackwell Publishing 2007 Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x

    Anthropocene geopolitics: globalisation, empire, environment and critique . 117

  • 8/8/2019 Antropocene Geopolitics Environment

    16/16

    International Geosphere Biosphere Program (2001).Global change and the earth system: a planetunder pressure. IGBP ScienceNo. 4.

    Johnston, C. (2000). Blowback: the costs and consequences of American empire. New York: Henry Holt.Jung, D. (ed.) (2003). Shadow globalization, ethnic conflicts and new wars: a political economy of intra-state

    war. London: Routledge.Kelly, P. (2006). A critique of cr itical geopolitics. Geopolitics 11 (1), pp.2453.Klare, M. (2004). Blood and oil: the dangers and consequences of Americas growing dependence on imported

    petroleum. New York: Metropolitan.Latour, B. (1993). We have never been modern. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.. (2004). Politics of nature: how to bring the sciences into democracy. Cambridge, MA: Harvard

    University Press.le Billon P. (2004). The geopolitical economy of resource wars. Geopolitics 9 (1), pp.128.. (ed.) (2005). Fuelling war: natural resources and armed conflict. Oxford, UK: Routledge.McDonald, F. (2006). Geopolitics and the Vision Thing: regarding Britain and Americas first

    nuclear missile. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 31 (1), pp.5371.Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005). Ecosystems and human wellbeing. 5 vols. Washington,

    DC: Island Press.

    OTuathail, G., (1996). Critical geopolitics: the politics of writing global space. Minneapolis, MN:University of Minnesota Press.

    OTuathail, G., and Agnew, J. (1992). Geopolitics and discourse: practical geopolitical reasoningin American foreign policy. Political Geography 11,pp.190204.

    OTuathail, G. and Dalby, S. (eds.) (1998). Rethinking geopolitics. London: Routledge.OTuathail, G., Dalby S., and Routledge, P. (eds.) (2006). The geopolitics reader. 2nd ed. London:

    Routledge.Paterson, M. (2007). Automobile politics: ecology and cultural political economy. Cambridge, UK:

    Cambridge University Press.Paterson, M., and Dalby, S. (2006). Empires ecological tyreprints. Environmental Politics 15 (1),

    pp.122.Polelle, M. (1999). Raising cartographic consciousness: the social and foreign policy vision of geopolitics in

    the twentieth century. Lanham, MD: Lexington.Sassen, S. (2006). Territory, authority, rights: from medieval to global assemblages. Princeton, NJ: Princeton

    University Press.Secretary Generals High Level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change (2004).A more secure

    world: our shared responsibility. New York: United Nations.Sempa, F. P. (2002). Geopolitics: from cold war to 21stcentury. London:Transaction.Sharp, J. (2000). Condensing the cold war: Readers Digest and American identity. Minneapolis, MN:

    University of Minnesota Press.Slater, D. (2004) Geopolitics and the post-colonial: rethinking North-South relations. Oxford, UK:

    Blackwell.

    Sparke, M. (2005). In the space of theory. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.Spykman, N. (1942).Americas strategy in world politics: the United States and the balance of power.

    New York: Harcourt Brace.. (1944). The geography of the peace. New York: Harcourt Brace.Steffen, W. et al. (2004). Global change and the earth system: a planet under pressure. New York:

    Springer-Verlag.Steger, M. (2005). Ideologies of globalization.Journal of Political Ideologies 10 (1), pp.1130.Taylor, P. (1990). Britain and the cold war: 1945 as geopolitical transition. London: Pinter.United Nations Environment Program (2002).Global environmental programme 3. London: Earthscan.

    118 . Anthropocene geopolitics: globalisation, empire, environment and critique

    Blackwell Publishing 2007 Geography Compass 1/1 (2007): 103118, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00007.x